How to crochet cow parsley – free crochet pattern

We moved to our cottage in early May 2003. I remember the usual stress of moving house, but I also remember the green surrounding our new Fen-edge home, and in particular the hedges lined with frothy cow parsley. I’d never lived in such a rural place before. Prior to our house behind Tesco’s in North Cambridge I’d lived in London for four years. What our village lacks in commercial outlets (there’s one pub and no shops) it makes up for in wildflowers, owls, muntjac deer and even, now and again, nightingales.

I’ve been a keen amateur botanist since I was a child, when my Mum and Grandad taught me the names of wildflowers and trees. As soon as we had settled into the cottage I found a patch of cow parsley up the lane and examined it. I’d not seen any at close quarters before. It’s a sort of tiny umbrella with green spokes, attached to which are tiny sprays of pale cream, exquisitely lacy florets. I’ve even seen bees sheltering beneath it during rain showers. When the flowers have finished the seedheads punctuate the hedgerows and remain until after Christmas, sometimes covered in frost. Their silhouettes make winter more beautiful. Cow parsley became an instant favourite of mine.

As time passed I realised that cow parsley wasn’t the only species with this parasol-like flower shape. Hogweed. wild parsnip, hedge parsley, wild carrot and fennel are fellow umbellifers or umbels. I began to learn the exact few weeks when each species was flowering and realised that there are umbels flowering in the hedgerows and woods of various shapes and sizes from April until October. This is a cheering thought.

I’ve long been keen to find a way to crochet a version of this flower form. A three dimensional version would be a challenge, but I began to adapt a mandala pattern by making a semi-circular version, simplifying it and adding some double trebles as a cluster of stems and it began to look promising. After some tinkering, more simplifcation and a change from white to cream I think my umbellifer garland might be ready for others to have a try. I’d so love to hear what you think and if you make one. (I’m silverpebble2 on Instagram – message me there if you prefer)

and a dk cream/ecru wool/cotton blend (although any white or cream dk yarn would be fine)

Abbreviations

sk – skip that stitch/stitches

ch – chain

ss – slip stitch

dc – double crochet

tr – treble crochet

dtr – double treble crochet

To make a double treble crochet stitch yarn over twice, insert hook, yarn over, pull through (four loops on hook), yarn over, pull through two loops, yarn over, pull through two loops, yarn over, pull through the final two loops on hook. This makes a very ‘tall’ stitch, which I’ve used to make the slender, multiple ‘stems’ of the cow parsley.

To begin use the green yarn to ch6 & join with a ss

Row 1: ch3, 11 tr into ch ring (ensure your tr are close together so a semi-circle forms), turn

Row 2: ch9, *sk 1 tr, dtr into the next tr, ch5* rpt * * four more times, dtr into last tr, turn

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[…] recently started to crochet and at the moment I am crocheting a cow parsley pattern found on the Silver pebble website .It is a free pattern which is fantastic. I have also bought the new book, Making Winter written […]